George Will On Religion and Founding Needs Ayn Rand's Theory of Rights
"He even says explicitly that neither successful self-government nor “a government with clear limits defined by the natural rights of the governed” requires religion. For these, writes Will, “religion is helpful and important but not quite essential.”"
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Yes. This is just as no one has to explain offensive behaviors of their group. "What about [light-skinned people / dark-skinned people / Muslims / atheists] who did [XYZ]? " People shouldn't have to answer for things *other people* did.
Yes. I think our Constitution is not for the best in us but for the part of us the freaks out and wants to ban unpopular speech, guns, and search every house for those horrible child abusers etc.
Ironically to most Objectivists, Christianity is quite a selfish decision to make. Christians realize what they perceive to be their own inadequacy and make a decision to live their lives for another man (Jesus Christ) in exchange for a promised future salvation. Whether that decision is a good decision or not is certainly one worth debating (and frankly has been debated thoroughly) in the Gulch.
I don't accept your premise.
Regarding whether Christians will not accept the point that ethics need not be based upon the existence of a god, many Christians will grant that one can certainly be ethical without the existence of a god. Pres. John Adams is a counterexample, but I can tell you of several people within the Gulch who are Christians that would "accept the point that ethics need not be based upon the existence of a god". That being said, it is easier to be moral when one has an unmoving foundation of values in place; for Christians, their god is that foundation.
Definition: deist - Deism is the belief that reason and observation of the natural world are sufficient to determine the existence of a Creator, accompanied with the rejection of religious knowledge as a source of authority.
This is more like the concept of Intelligent Design than explicitly Christian. We Objectivists argue that reason and observation of the natural world are sufficient to determine that there is no need for the existence of any god and that, in fact, accepting the existence of a (necessarily) supernatural god is counter to reality. As you have said before, you may choose to believe what you want to believe and I'll go down a different path.
I'd put this to you: relying on the government to enforce an altruistic policy is, at best, a lazy man's act. At worst, it promotes theft and covetousness--both of which the Judeo-Christian traditions forbid.
When you force someone else to give, that's theft. Worse than that, it is robbery.
Try this exercise: read a Papal encyclical and replace the word "God" with the word "State" and see just how close it comes to a Communist equivalent. The relationship between Christianity and Communism is uncanny. If you agree that Communism is evil, I'd suggest that you look very closely at what you've let into your religion. I suggest that it is built-in and cannot be separated.
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